The AI market is split between two strategies. Some companies build hyper-expensive, complex models (the "cappuccino machine") targeting the whole world. Others focus on cheaper, standardized, and accessible solutions (the "coffee pod"), creating a fundamental strategic divide for where value will accrue.
The AI market is becoming "polytheistic," with numerous specialized models excelling at niche tasks, rather than "monotheistic," where a single super-model dominates. This fragmentation creates opportunities for differentiated startups to thrive by building effective models for specific use cases, as no single model has mastered everything.
Like containerization, AI is a transformative technology where value may accrue to customers and users, not the creators of the core infrastructure. The biggest fortunes from containerization were made by companies like Nike and Apple that leveraged global supply chains, not by investors in the container companies themselves.
Creating frontier AI models is incredibly expensive, yet their value depreciates rapidly as they are quickly copied or replicated by lower-cost open-source alternatives. This forces model providers to evolve into more defensible application companies to survive.
As foundational AI models become more accessible, the key to winning the market is shifting from having the most advanced model to creating the best user experience. This "age of productization" means skilled product managers who can effectively package AI capabilities are becoming as crucial as the researchers themselves.
Instead of relying solely on massive, expensive, general-purpose LLMs, the trend is toward creating smaller, focused models trained on specific business data. These "niche" models are more cost-effective to run, less likely to hallucinate, and far more effective at performing specific, defined tasks for the enterprise.
Small firms can outmaneuver large corporations in the AI era by embracing rapid, low-cost experimentation. While enterprises spend millions on specialized PhDs for single use cases, agile companies constantly test new models, learn from failures, and deploy what works to dominate their market.
The novelty of new AI model capabilities is wearing off for consumers. The next competitive frontier is not about marginal gains in model performance but about creating superior products. The consensus is that current models are "good enough" for most applications, making product differentiation key.
Initially, even OpenAI believed a single, ultimate 'model to rule them all' would emerge. This thinking has completely changed to favor a proliferation of specialized models, creating a healthier, less winner-take-all ecosystem where different models serve different needs.
The true commercial impact of AI will likely come from small, specialized "micro models" solving boring, high-volume business tasks. While highly valuable, these models are cheap to run and cannot economically justify the current massive capital expenditure on AGI-focused data centers.
Contrary to the 'winner-takes-all' narrative, the rapid pace of innovation in AI is leading to a different outcome. As rival labs quickly match or exceed each other's model capabilities, the underlying Large Language Models (LLMs) risk becoming commodities, making it difficult for any single player to justify stratospheric valuations long-term.